Well, here's an automotive tragedy.

Item Location: Texas

Go figure.

Must have moved from Oklahoma. Real Texans woulda' jacked it ta' Jesus.

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Potential maintenance costs make that a no go. Loved it new, after 30 yrs not so appealing. The timing belt was 8' long on those things. When things go bad on one of them they go very bad.


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Just about every 928 that I've seen at the shows this year have been pretty beat up and showing their age.
 
Anyway, as much as old school Porschefiles knocked the 928, it evolved into an incredible car before its demise. The 1987 928S4 was THE FASTEST PRODUCTION CAR on the road at the time. Faster than the 911 Turbo (930), faster than a Testarossa, faster than a Countach. It could also outperform all of those cars on a skid pad due to its near perfect weight distribution.


I drove one of those and it was simply stunning to drive. In comparison, I drove a Ruf modified 930 slope nose that felt more ferocious but your left leg would be exhausted after a short time of driving because the clutch was so strong. The 928 felt like most drivers could drive it aggressively without it ending up backwards in a ditch.
 
I drove one of those and it was simply stunning to drive. In comparison, I drove a Ruf modified 930 slope nose that felt more ferocious but your left leg would be exhausted after a short time of driving because the clutch was so strong. The 928 felt like most drivers could drive it aggressively without it ending up backwards in a ditch.


I had a Sachs x5 racing clutch in my 930S. It was br00tal. Nigh impossible to drive around town.

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Maybe it was wrecked before they reimagined it as a truck.

That's entirely likely. Those wrap around rear glass hatches and the full wrap bumpers were both expensive. They likely grabbed one that had been rear ended and fiberglassed a new ass on it.
 
That's entirely likely. Those wrap around rear glass hatches and the full wrap bumpers were both expensive. They likely grabbed one that had been rear ended and fiberglassed a new ass on it.


Wrong.

Fucking hillbilly found out it was going to cost $2K to replace the clutch and decided to try it himself.

3 days and several sawzall blades later, he finally arrived at the offending part by cutting the rear of the car to pieces.

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Wasn't the 928 the first car you could turn off one of the banks of cylinders, so it would basically run on 4 cylinders?

Now that I think about it, wasn't the engine two 944 4 cylinders mounted together or was it the other way around, the 944 had an engine that was only 4 of the 928's 8 cylinders?
 
Wrong.

Fucking hillbilly found out it was going to cost $2K to replace the clutch and decided to try it himself.

3 days and several sawzall blades later, he finally arrived at the offending part by cutting the rear of the car to pieces.

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I'm not a mechanic but I don't think that a sawzall is the best tool for clutch replacement.

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Wasn't the 928 the first car you could turn off one of the banks of cylinders, so it would basically run on 4 cylinders?

Now that I think about it, wasn't the engine two 944 4 cylinders mounted together or was it the other way around, the 944 had an engine that was only 4 of the 928's 8 cylinders?

The engine management could shut down half of the cylinders to save fuel.

Porsche liked the chassis of the 924 but didn't like the audi based engine that was in it, so instead used half of the 928 engine and developed the 944.

both the 928 and the 944 had the engine in front but instead of the transmission being connected to the engine, the transmission was moved all the way to the back of the car. The driveshaft connected the engine to the transmission. This was fantastic for weight distribution and my tire salesman can attest to how well the 944's balanced in the curves. :grin:
 
I want a Boxster S so bad. I know the Cayman will outperform the Boxster, but I want to be able to take the top down and tear through the back roads. :love:

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I'm not a mechanic but I don't think that a sawzall is the best tool for clutch replacement.

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If you ever tried to perform a clutch pack replacement on a 928, you might think otherwise.

It is BURIED along with the trans in the back of the car.

Yes, the engine is in front.

Porsche adopted this layout in the 70's with all of their front engine cars, 924, 944, 928 etc...

It was a huge leap in managing weight distribution and lead to the 944S becoming the first production car to achieve 1.0G on a skidpad.

Other manufacturers called them crazy.


30+ years later, GM/Chevy adopted the same layout in the Corvette and made a big deal out telling everyone with ears how fucking innovative and cutting edge "their" idea was, and how it ultimately tamed the Corvette's notoriously bad manners.

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